![]() ![]() ![]() Delivery with Standard Australia Post usually happens within 2-10 business days from time of dispatch.You can track your delivery by going to AusPost tracking and entering your tracking number - your Order Shipped email will contain this information for each parcel. Tracking delivery Saver Delivery: Australia postĪustralia Post deliveries can be tracked on route with eParcel. NB All our estimates are based on business days and assume that shipping and delivery don't occur on holidays and weekends. Order may come in multiple shipments, however you will only be charged a flat fee.ġ-2 days after each item has arrived in the warehouseġ The expected delivery period after the order has been dispatched via your chosen delivery method.ģ Please note this service does not override the status timeframe "Dispatches in", and that the "Usually Dispatches In" timeframe still applies to all orders. Items in order will be sent via Express post as soon as they arrive in the warehouse. Order may come in multiple shipments, however you will only be charged a flat fee.Ģ-10 days after all items have arrived in the warehouse ![]() Items in order will be sent as soon as they arrive in the warehouse. ![]()
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![]() ![]() ![]() If you are found to be excessively promoting your book in the comments, you will be banned.īeware: Amazon links could be caught in the spam filter. This is not the place to advertise your book. Any illegal content will be removed at the moderators' discretion. If you want to include a link in your suggestion we encourage you to link to the author's page or to an amazon alternative.ĭon't link to illegal content. Top level replies must be suggestions or question to clear up the request. Don't attack the requests or any suggestions made, and definitely do not attack or scold individual users (it's sad really, that we actually have to specifically say this.) No Meta posts about this or any other subreddit.No "Should I read this book / is this book any good?" posts.Any submission with a link will be removed. Please use the text box to formulate your request in a clear and precise manner. Title-only posts will be summarily removed. ![]() IF YOU COME HERE FOR THE SOLE PURPOSE OF ADVERTISING A BOOK, YOU WILL BE BANNED.įor book promotion please visit /r/wroteabook. For general discussions about books please visit /r/books or /r/literature. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Adult romance author Cole moves past apocalypse into pure horror as she launches her first series for teens: bracketing Evie’s narrative of self-discovery is her chilling encounter with a serial killer who keeps girls-and bodies-in the basement. After the Flash, Evie faces a whole new reality: she’s not crazy. ![]() Her visions of writhing vines and a savagely murderous red witch are just something she has to deal with. In the days before the Flash, a disaster that decimates the planet, Evie is mostly concerned with dodging her boyfriend’s plans for her virginity and surviving the last two years of high school. And there’s the crazy of 16-year-old Evie, who sees hallucinations that have bloody and all-too-real effects in the real world. There’s the crazy of the seething Cajun boy, Jackson, with bandaged knuckles, a drinking problem, and nightmares. There’s the crazy of a grandmother locked up in the madhouse. In Louisiana, there’s every kind of crazy. ![]() ![]() ![]() Thanks to this neat framing device, what was once obsolete sci-fi is now alternative history. The old film spooling through his projector takes us back another 70 years, when he, a young, feckless entrepreneur called Julius Bedford ( Rory Kinnear) first meets the eccentric Professor Cavor, played by Gatiss. A creepy old man who runs a "kinematographic" tent show tells a young boy that actually, he had been the first man on the moon. It begins in 1969, on the eve of the Apollo moon landings, at an English funfair. His solution – a rather brilliant one – is to backdate the story, but only by 40 years. W ith his adaptation of HG Wells's The First Men In The Moon (BBC4), Mark Gatiss set himself a puzzle: how could he convey the obvious admiration he feels for Wells as a visionary while dramatising a tale that is in many ways fantastically quaint? You can't update a story about Edwardians going to the moon. ![]() |